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Characteristics of Police Officer Suicides in the Federal Austrian Police Corps
Background: Suicide rates among police officers may be high because of strong occupational stressors. Aims: This study examined the suicide rate and suicide characteristics among police officers in the Federal Austrian Police Force. Methods: All suicides among policemen during the period 1996-2006 w...
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Published in: | Crisis : the journal of crisis intervention and suicide prevention 2010-01, Vol.31 (5), p.265-271 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background:
Suicide rates among police officers may be high
because of strong occupational stressors.
Aims:
This study
examined the suicide rate and suicide characteristics among police officers in
the Federal Austrian Police Force.
Methods:
All suicides among
policemen during the period 1996-2006 were analyzed retrospectively on
the basis of personalized police record files from all Austrian police
departments. Information on sex, age, marital status, children, region, method
and place of suicide, suicide notes, position, and length of service was
extracted from these files. The general Austrian population, adjusted for sex
and age composition, served as the comparison group.
Results:
The suicide rate among male police officers was 30.2/100,000
(
SD
11.0), which was comparable to the suicide rate in the
adjusted general population (30.5/100,000;
SD
2.9). The
female police officer suicide rate was 1.8/100,000, while the
corresponding suicide rate of the adjusted female general population was
12.5/100,000 (
SD
1.7). Firearms were the most frequent
suicide method (77.8%), and the incidence of suicide notes was
30.8%.
Conclusions:
Suicide rates among police officers
seem comparable to those of the age-adjusted general population. Given the
healthy-worker effect, these results still suggest an increased risk of suicide
among police officers. These findings should stimulate further research on
stressors and risk factors for suicide among officers and should also encourage
departments to increase awareness regarding suicidal signs among officers. |
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ISSN: | 0227-5910 2151-2396 |
DOI: | 10.1027/0227-5910/a000033 |